Juliet is the senior web editor for BizTech and HealthTech magazines. In her six years as a journalist she has covered everything from aerospace to indie music reviews — but she is unfailingly partial to covering technology.

Data analytics are already at work in healthcare organizations far and wide to inform organizational change and care decisions.

"Hospitals and health systems have mountains of clinical, operational and financial data at their disposal, thanks to the proliferation of electronic health records, time management systems and other sources of data within their organizations," a recent report from HIMSS Analytics notes.

Many healthcare systems are putting this data to use and seeing true impacts on patient care. At Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, for example, the organization is using data analytics to boost performance and create a more transparent culture, Andrea Tull, director of reporting and analytics, quality and safety management for Massachusetts General Hospital, tells HealthTech.

“The technology has definitely helped us up our game in quality improvement,” she says. “Mass General has always been a data-driven institution, but analytics allows us to leverage the data to answer more targeted questions.”

Meanwhile, at Union Hospital of Cecil County in Elkton, Md., analytics helps the organization stay on top of possible security threats and manage clinical quality through the use of data visualization dashboards.

“It’s a really good way to ingest data that is organized and more serviceable for individuals, from security to business,” UHCC HIPAA Security Officer Nolan Forrest tells HealthTech. “It’s incredibly powerful.”

Experts Weigh In on Healthcare Analytics Best Practices

But while but while nearly 93 percent of organizations have an analytics strategy in place, the HIMSS Analytics report has also found that many organizations aren’t making the best use of their data, and around 30 percent haven’t been executing on their analytics strategy in some time. Further, data-based decision-making can be siloed, limiting its impact.

Although data analytics can be transformational, organizations must first consider some basic principles prior to deployment in order to avoid situations where data and analytics might become lost or skewed, IT leaders say.

For instance, Cara Martino, a registered nurse and enterprise business intelligence manager for Jefferson Health, says that IT staff need deep organizational knowledge, not just technical skill, to meet the needs of end users.